Rhonda said Ben liked how the Vicodin made him feel. "He wanted more," she said. "We had to hide it."

According to Rhonda, it took just days for Ben to be hooked.

"It put him on a path of a very difficult life," she recalled. "He began doctor shopping — went from doctor to doctor" — looking, she said, for more them to prescribe more painkillers.

When he couldn't find a doctor to prescribe them, Ben turned to the illegal drug heroin, as can be the case among opioid addicts. Heroin is also an opioid, but one that's much more potent than prescription opioids.

Six years after his wisdom teeth were removed, Ben died of an overdose.

Ben is not alone — according to a new Stanford University School of Medicine study, 6 percent of teens and young adults who were prescribed opiates, that is, drugs derived from opium, by a dentist became addicted within a year.

"That number was even larger for young girls — 10 percent — it's a wake-up call for the dental community to look for alternates," said Angelo Valente, executive director of the Partnership for a Drug-Free New Jersey.

Ceelie Snarr told Inside Edition her dentist offered her Percocet for pain but she turned it down, opting for over-the-counter painkillers instead. And many dentists are now recommending you do the same.

"Motrin and Tylenol has been shown to be just as effective as an opioid drug and that has become our standard of care," Dr. Mark Vitale told Inside Edition.